View Poll Results: Should the mid-level 5th gen engine be a V6 or a V8?
It should be a 5.3 V8, making 325-350hp
131
71.98%
It should be a V6, making 325-350hp
13
7.14%
Who cares what it is, so long as the power is right for its niche?
27
14.84%
I don't care, I won't buy one either way...
11
6.04%
Voters: 182. You may not vote on this poll
Time to vote...should the "mid-level" engine be a V6 or a V8??
#166
Re: Time to vote...should the "mid-level" engine be a V6 or a V8??
Originally Posted by falchulk
The base car will be a v6. Notice a lot more people are buying the GT these days. Also, look to the LX platform cars. People want a V8 but not the insane 0 to 60 and 1/4 mile that a 400hp engine will bring. Give them that choice. Then build an upper level v8 or v8's to satisfy the performance nuts.
#167
Re: Time to vote...should the "mid-level" engine be a V6 or a V8??
Originally Posted by RussStang
I am all for a v8 addition with 325-350hp to the base model for a few thousand more, but how do you "know" what people want? Give the people a 4th gen z28 trim level equivalent with 400hp for $28k and watch it sell. Those who don't need the power, but want the coolness of a higher trim level will never tap into the power. My sister has a friend with a 2001 Mustang GT. Does she need the power of a v8? Nope. She never get anywhere near putting her foot down in that car.
Ok, why did the 4th gen not sell then?
#168
Re: Time to vote...should the "mid-level" engine be a V6 or a V8??
Originally Posted by RussStang
Once again, you don't seem to be wanting to read what I have said, or are misunderstanding it greatly. The base car needs to be good, and needs to attract the masses in the coupe market. Where have I said anything about the car should only suit the minority????? Mustangs are a fashion statement, and I know these kinds of cars get driven everyday. Mine does. Have you ever had a Mustang?? I have, for quite some time actually (well over a year). They aren't that much more practical then a 4th gen. I know plenty of guys that consider Mustangs weekend cars as well. If the car did not have its cool factor, it would not sell like it does. If practically is a huge concern, there are far too many offerings out there that would do a better job at that at the Mustang's price point.
The Camaro can't be an over the top vehicle that turns people off to it immediately, but guys, it is a Camaro, not an Accord.
The Camaro can't be an over the top vehicle that turns people off to it immediately, but guys, it is a Camaro, not an Accord.
#169
Re: Time to vote...should the "mid-level" engine be a V6 or a V8??
Originally Posted by falchulk
The base camaro has always been all show and no go. From the very begining. The same for the mustang. Not used much diffrently then an Accord ao that people could get "from a to b" as you said earlier. Thats the people that you need to have so the car can survive.
Ok, why did the 4th gen not sell then?
#170
Re: Time to vote...should the "mid-level" engine be a V6 or a V8??
Originally Posted by RussStang
Maybe they are used like an Accord, but the Accord does the point A to point B thing a billion times better.
Because of a dated design on a old platform that got refreshed far too little and was never advertised in the end. It is apparent that GM had little desire to to push for the Camaro/Firebird in the later years, and were content with just letting them die. I have never heard a good reason about the 4th gen dying because it made too much power, just heresay, and pretty much limited only to internet message boards.
Because of a dated design on a old platform that got refreshed far too little and was never advertised in the end. It is apparent that GM had little desire to to push for the Camaro/Firebird in the later years, and were content with just letting them die. I have never heard a good reason about the 4th gen dying because it made too much power, just heresay, and pretty much limited only to internet message boards.
Hmm, the design was a lot more fresh then the mustang and it kept selling. GM turned the camaro into a 4 seat (the rear 2 without functionality)corvette. The majority of people did not want to live with the low slung entry and the sit on the floor seating. In effect, it was LESS practical then the mustang. It looks like they have fixed these issues in the new concept.
It also had the power of a Corvette which scare the non enthusiast. In effect, you have to cater to the masses, cater to the people that want the performance, and cater to the people that want the look and sound of the performance but are scared of 400hp. It's not hard to do.
#171
Re: Time to vote...should the "mid-level" engine be a V6 or a V8??
Originally Posted by falchulk
Hmm, the design was a lot more fresh then the mustang and it kept selling.
It also had the power of a Corvette which scare the non enthusiast. In effect, you have to cater to the masses, cater to the people that want the performance, and cater to the people that want the look and sound of the performance but are scared of 400hp. It's not hard to do.
If you think I think the 5th gen should be an engine in a box, you are sorely mistaken. HOwever, I feel that it is ridiculous to believe that if you stick a weaker engine in the 5th gen, you can watch the sales roll in. Jason's idea is a good one, if GM can pull it off. Offer the customer a cheap v8 upgrade on the base car. That would probably pull in some people. There is no way I want to see a midtrim car with only 325-350hp in this day and age though.[/QUOTE]
GM turned the camaro into a 4 seat (the rear 2 without functionality)corvette
Last edited by RussStang; 03-16-2006 at 11:18 AM.
#172
Re: Time to vote...should the "mid-level" engine be a V6 or a V8??
Originally Posted by RussStang
Um, no. The Camaro got a mild facelift in 98. Most nonethusiasts don't know the difference between the two. A 98 and a 99 Mustang look substantially different, enough for the casual observer to notice.
You keep stating this, but there is no proof that has been offered at all that 400hp would scare people away. I would bet many people who just want the v8 don't even know what the hell 400hp means. I am sooooooooooooo tired of hearing that the 4th gen did not sell because "it made too much power". That is the biggest crock of sh*t I think I have ever read on here, and some people preach it as gospel. The 4th gen didn't sell for plenty of reasons. It was kind of a sh*t car, without a substantial redesign, and virtually no advertising towards the end of its life (the Firebird had the Muscle Car lives commercial, but the Camaro didn't really have anything).
If you think I think the 5th gen should be an engine in a box, you are sorely mistaken. HOwever, I feel that it is ridiculous to believe that if you stick a weaker engine in the 5th gen, you can watch the sales roll in. Jason's idea is a good one, if GM can pull it off. Offer the customer a cheap v8 upgrade on the base car. That would probably pull in some people. There is no way I want to see a midtrim car with only 325-350hp in this day and age though.
You keep stating this, but there is no proof that has been offered at all that 400hp would scare people away. I would bet many people who just want the v8 don't even know what the hell 400hp means. I am sooooooooooooo tired of hearing that the 4th gen did not sell because "it made too much power". That is the biggest crock of sh*t I think I have ever read on here, and some people preach it as gospel. The 4th gen didn't sell for plenty of reasons. It was kind of a sh*t car, without a substantial redesign, and virtually no advertising towards the end of its life (the Firebird had the Muscle Car lives commercial, but the Camaro didn't really have anything).
If you think I think the 5th gen should be an engine in a box, you are sorely mistaken. HOwever, I feel that it is ridiculous to believe that if you stick a weaker engine in the 5th gen, you can watch the sales roll in. Jason's idea is a good one, if GM can pull it off. Offer the customer a cheap v8 upgrade on the base car. That would probably pull in some people. There is no way I want to see a midtrim car with only 325-350hp in this day and age though.
This day and age? What does that matter? When you ar giving people 0 to 60 in 4.5 seconds thats a major concern. They can do a lot of damage accidentlaly before they can even react. Its not the power numbers that matter here, its the performace it achives with them. 400hp is good midlevel for a heavier car. Your average person does not need or should even be trusted with super car type performance.
#174
Re: Time to vote...should the "mid-level" engine be a V6 or a V8??
Originally Posted by falchulk
This day and age? What does that matter? When you ar giving people 0 to 60 in 4.5 seconds thats a major concern. They can do a lot of damage accidentlaly before they can even react. Its not the power numbers that matter here, its the performace it achives with them. 400hp is good midlevel for a heavier car. Your average person does not need or should even be trusted with super car type performance.
What I mean by this day and age is that it is becoming increasingly common to see 300hp or near 300hp cars being attainable to the average joe. The Camaro is a muscle car, why give it only enough muscle to compete in its segment, especially when it sounds like GM could give it a healthy dose above it's competiton, and still keep it attainable? I have never seen any solid proof that high HP cars kill, because if it was true I would expect to see many more dead in their GTOs and Chargers than there actually are.
#175
Re: Time to vote...should the "mid-level" engine be a V6 or a V8??
Originally Posted by falchulk
I think the focus should be on the HP not the engine itself.
If the Camaro engine is tuned from within inches of its life, so to speak, most enthusiasts are going to be unhappy. Whatever engine it is, it must have significant potential to upgrade beyond its factory output levels.
#176
Re: Time to vote...should the "mid-level" engine be a V6 or a V8??
Originally Posted by JakeRobb
I disagree. While horsepower (and torque) are important, the modifiability of the engine matters a lot to the enthusiasts. While GM is, of course, targeting more than just the enthusiasts, they would be wise to keep them in mind most of the time when building a Camaro.
If the Camaro engine is tuned from within inches of its life, so to speak, most enthusiasts are going to be unhappy. Whatever engine it is, it must have significant potential to upgrade beyond its factory output levels.
If the Camaro engine is tuned from within inches of its life, so to speak, most enthusiasts are going to be unhappy. Whatever engine it is, it must have significant potential to upgrade beyond its factory output levels.
hey man, if they slapped a detuned ls2 in there with 330hp it would work fine. Even offer perfomance stage packages from GM the way that mopar does for the srt4. Just give the people a choice.
#177
Re: Time to vote...should the "mid-level" engine be a V6 or a V8??
Originally Posted by falchulk
hey man, if they slapped a detuned ls2 in there with 330hp it would work fine. Even offer perfomance stage packages from GM the way that mopar does for the srt4. Just give the people a choice.
What would NOT be fine, for instance (and I'm not implying that they would actually do this), would be something like a 4.0L V8 tuned to 330 hp. There's not enough easy modification potential.
The point is that more than just the horsepower is important.
#178
Re: Time to vote...should the "mid-level" engine be a V6 or a V8??
Originally Posted by JakeRobb
Now that would be fine. There's lots of modification potential there.
What would NOT be fine, for instance (and I'm not implying that they would actually do this), would be something like a 4.0L V8 tuned to 330 hp. There's not enough easy modification potential.
The point is that more than just the horsepower is important.
What would NOT be fine, for instance (and I'm not implying that they would actually do this), would be something like a 4.0L V8 tuned to 330 hp. There's not enough easy modification potential.
The point is that more than just the horsepower is important.
By HP, I meant that a low level v8 with less then huge horsepower be available.
#179
Re: Time to vote...should the "mid-level" engine be a V6 or a V8??
Originally Posted by falchulk
The base camaro has always been all show and no go. From the very begining. The same for the mustang. Not used much diffrently then an Accord ao that people could get "from a to b" as you said earlier. Thats the people that you need to have so the car can survive.
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